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Posts Tagged ‘Clay Reilly’

Freshman Sean Toomey-Stout made off with his first high school interception Friday night. (John Fisken photo)

   Freshman Sean Toomey-Stout made off with his first high school interception Friday night. (John Fisken photo)

The beginning, awesome.

The end, stellar.

The middle, needs some work.

The Coupeville High School football team opened strongly and finished strongly Friday night, but got burnt by seven unanswered touchdowns and fell 47-14 to visiting Nooksack Valley.

The non-conference loss drops the Wolves to 1-2.

CHS kicks off its seven-game Olympic/Nisqually League schedule with a trip to Tacoma to face Charles Wright Academy next week.

Friday night’s tilt against the Pioneers started so promisingly, with Coupeville getting a strong kickoff return from Matt Hilborn, then marching right down the field for a game-opening touchdown.

Everything was clicking, with strong runs from Clay Reilly and Jacob Martin, split around two quick strikes from Wolf QB Hunter Downes.

First the junior signal caller tossed an 11-yard pass to Hunter Smith, then Downes connected with speed demon Cameron Toomey-Stout on a 34-yard reception.

The last Nooksack defender managed to knock Toomey-Stout out at the two-yard line, but Coupeville promptly stuffed the ball in two plays later.

Downes took the one-yard plunge to pay dirt behind a tooth-rattling lead block from Julian Welling.

Up 7-0 two-and-a-half minutes into the game, with clear skies and Wolf announcer Willie Smith spewing prime one-liners on the PA system, things looked rosy.

Then everything fell off a cliff for a bit.

Nooksack tied the game up just two plays later, when six-foot-five Pioneer QB Casey Bauman launched a rocket down the left sideline that hit his receiver in perfect stride.

Who that receiver was, no one knows, as a whole chunk of Nooksack’s jersey numbers didn’t match up with their roster.

Which didn’t matter much, because a few minutes later the heavens opened, rain began to fall and all the rosters become a sodden pile of of ink-streaked garbage anyway.

With CHS using temporary bleachers for a year, there’s no press box this season, and Willie Smith and timekeeper extraordinaire Joel Norris were left, well … high and dry would be the exact opposite of reality.

Huddled under a makeshift, at best, pop-up cover, they played chicken with using electronics in the rain, while fighting through a haze of darkness caused by the flimsy awning.

Which was probably for the best, as they only half-witnessed Nooksack rip off four more first-quarter touchdowns, the final one coming on a 28-yard pass with no time left on the clock.

The Pioneers tacked on two more scores in the second quarter to close the half, a time period where the high point for the Wolves was the two times Nooksack’s kicker shanked his extra point attempts.

Coupeville did have two standout plays of its own amid the carnage, however.

Hunter Smith laid out a Pioneer punt returner, lighting him up a millisecond after he snagged the ball, while Reilly pulled off a fake punt and turned it into a 45-yard sprint to daylight.

Just like with Cameron Toomey-Stout’s reception, though, the last Pioneer in the way managed to save the touchdown, and this time Coupeville fumbled the ball away two plays later.

With a running clock, a sodden crowd, and a severely compromised announcing crew, it would have been easy for the Wolves to write off the second half.

Instead, they took CHS coach Jon Atkins‘ halftime remarks to heart, and finished the final 24 minutes with their best sustained play of the night.

Freshman Sean Toomey-Stout made off with his first career interception while Reilly was a two-way beast, scoring on an 11-yard run and making tackles left and right.

With fired-up seniors Reilly and Martin leading the attack, Coupeville held Nooksack scoreless in the second half, twice forcing the Pioneers to turn the ball over on downs.

That put at least a small smile on Atkins face afterwards.

“They got the message and finished strong,” he said. “We finished positive, showed a lot of intensity and won the second half. Now we’ll build on that.”

While praising several players, Atkins offered a special shout-out to his freshman warrior.

Sean is really earning his varsity time,” he said. “He played all four quarters tonight, got his first pick, and was flying around.

“He’s making a play for being top dog in his family.”

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Hunter Smith (John Fisken photos)

Hunter Smith gets ready to slice ‘n dice in the open field. (John Fisken photos)

Clay Reilly

Clay Reilly looks for running room.

captains

   Wolf captains (l to r) Hunter Downes, Uriel Liquidano, Reilly and Jacob Martin get ready for the singing of the national anthem.

cheer

CHS cheerleaders work on their sideline moves.

handoff

Martin (left) gets ready to accept a gift from his quarterback.

Clay

   There’s nowhere to run, nowhere to hide for a Brave runner once Reilly appears on the scene.

The score wasn’t so great, but the photos were better.

With Oak Harbor having played a rare Thursday game, wanderin’ photo man John Fisken was free to head down to La Conner Friday night to catch Coupeville in action.

And, while the Wolves got roughed up a bit in a 53-6 loss, they did manage to provide the paparazzi with some nice photo ops.

To see more of Fisken’s work (purchases fund college scholarships for CHS student/athletes) pop over to:

http://www.johnsphotos.net/Sports/FB-20160910-Coupeville-at-LaCo/

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Clay Reilly (John Fisken photos)

   Clay Reilly (2) sees the end zone and he’ll be danged if anyone is getting in his way. (John Fisken photos)

Mckenzie

Wolf cheerleader Mckenzie Meyer touches the heavens.

Payton

   Spikers Sarah Wright (left) and Payton Aparicio hone their already-formidable bumping skills.

Ashleigh

Wolf frosh Ashleigh Battaglia kind of enjoys cheer. At least a little bit.

Willow

Willow Vick is locked in the zone.

line

A Wolf lineman offers the stare o’ death.

Julie Bucio

Julie Bucio embraces school spirit, full tilt.

Hunter

   The past meets the future, as junior QB Hunter Downes fires a pass while being monitored by offensive coordinator Brad Sherman, who holds all the CHS passing records.

Scout

Freshman Scout Smith (center) jumps into the fray on day one.

Put in the work now, win later.

That’s the goal for Coupeville High School’s fall sports programs, which all put in practice time Monday.

Wandering camera clicker John Fisken was able to nab three of the five Wolf teams in action, netting volleyball, football and cheer.

Boys tennis and girls soccer were also scheduled to make their practice debuts Monday, and we’ll try and nab some photos of those squads in the coming days.

Until then, a picturesque look at some of the Wolves who will light up the scoreboard this season.

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Jacob Martin wants to spend less time on the sideline injured, and more time on the field, ripping up things. (John Fisken photos)

   Jacob Martin wants to spend less time on the sideline injured, and more time on the field, ripping up things. (John Fisken photos)

Clay Reilly

Clay Reilly was the best punter in 1A as a junior.

It’s their time.

With Coupeville High School’s football team hoping to field a dynamic running attack, continuing a trend from recent years, three Wolf seniors hope to step up and make a big impact.

Young guns like Chris Battaglia and Teo Keilwitz should figure in the mix, but Jacob Martin, Clay Reilly and Mitchell Carroll are hoping to give the Wolves a three-headed monster of a backfield.

Martin is the only one of the three who played there last season, picking up 123 yards on 25 carries.

He was third on the squad in rushing behind seniors Wiley Hesselgrave and Lathom Kelley, but spent much of the year slowed by injuries.

Now he’s feeling healthy and wants to take a crack at the kind of numbers former teammates Jake Tumblin and Josh Bayne rolled up on the gridiron.

“I’m quick and shifty, hard to take down,” Martin said. “I want to set scoring and rushing records.”

Reilly, a strong defensive back who led all 1A punters last season with 1,156 yards, is eager to make an impact on both sides of the ball this season.

“My strengths as a rusher is that I’m fast and strong,” he said. “My goal as a rusher is to have a touchdown every game (at least).”

Carroll, who opts to let his actions speak for him, was among team leaders in tackles as a junior, and is coming off of his first trip to state as a track jumper.

However the carries shake out among the seniors and their sophomore counterparts, they all aspire to reach the heights set by their recent predecessors.

Watching some of the now departed players in action every day at practice and in games helped to shape the current Wolves outlook on the game.

Lathom taught me to lower my shoulder and run through defenders,” Martin said. “Jake and Josh taught me to lead by example and to keep my head up.”

That last sentiment is one shared by Reilly.

“What I’ve learned from them is to run through defenders, stiff arm them when they try to take me down and to always keep my head up,” he said.

They may not agree on which player has the best skill-set, staking their own claim (Martin says “I’m the quickest” while Reilly counters with “I think I’m the fastest”), but they remain committed to excel, as individuals and a team.

Knowing this is their final prep season, they want to exit strongly and impact younger players like Bayne and Co. did with them.

Reilly sums it up perfectly for all of the backfield seniors.

“I’m gonna try to be the best.”

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CJ Smith is one of three seniors who the Wolves will lose to graduation. (Sylvia Hurlburt photo)

   Staff ace CJ Smith is one of three seniors who the Wolves will lose to graduation. (Sylvia Hurlburt photo)

Gabe Wynn (John Fisken photo)

   Junior left fielder Gabe Wynn is one of seven starters who could return next season. (John Fisken photo)

Better than Klahowya.

The Coupeville High School baseball squad bowed 6-1 to Seattle Christian Thursday, ending its playoff run, but they didn’t get shellacked like their Olympic League rivals.

The Eagles were drilled 10-1 when they faced the Warriors in the opening round of the district playoffs and were one and done.

The Wolves, as league champs, got two tries, but a loss to Cascade Christian Tuesday put them in a precarious spot, and Seattle Christian finished the job behind stellar pitching.

Coupeville finished its first year under Marc Aparicio at 10-12.

“Great season. Wish it would have lasted a bit longer,” said the hardball guru.

With the win, Seattle Christian gets a chance to play for a berth in the state playoffs Saturday.

Their foe will be Vashon Island, the Nisqually League’s #1 seed, which was upset 4-2 Thursday in the district championship game by Cascade Christian.

The Warriors blitzed Coupeville behind a superb performance by hurler Alex Evenson, who took a perfect game into the sixth inning.

The Wolves refused to go down easily, however, breaking up the no-no on a sharply-hit single by junior Clay Reilly.

While he was gunned down by half a step on a subsequent steal attempt, CHS then put together three consecutive singles to plate its only run of the afternoon.

The base knocks came off of the bats of Ethan Marx, Matt Hilborn and Hunter Smith.

Coupeville added a fifth hit in the seventh, when Kory Score laced a single, but that was it for the late-game revival at the plate.

Seattle Christian scored early, putting two across in the first, plating three in the second and tacking on a final run in the third, then coasted home.

While the loss ended Coupeville’s season, the Wolves, a very young team, can look back in pride on being the first CHS baseball squad to win a league title since 1991.

They lose just three seniors, with staff ace CJ Smith, rock-solid catcher Cole Payne and utility man Brenden Gilbert bidding farewell to the program.

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